A Plum By Any Other Name

  • Stories
  • About
  • Recipes
  • Images

Loose Vermouth Caramelized Cherry Tomatoes

September 01, 2012 by Emily Gelsomin in Eat Vegetables

These tomatoes are studs.  Tomatoes about town. They are bowtied with thyme and lemon verbena, appropriately liquored up with a little vermouth.  And they come to you with loose dinner plate morals, hardly capable of sticking to one dish.  

They were spread on charcoal-grilled flatbread. They were smashed on a rosemary boule slice over a thin layer of goat cheese. They cozied up nicely with a melty ten-dollar burrata. 

They were even thrown impulsively into a workday kale salad designed to swallow up dinner leftovers.  I have wanted to toss them with homemade fettuccini and some thick low count shrimp, but they have yet to make the leap to full dinner fork-on-plate contact.

Gone before the pasta water could reach a rolling boil. 

So thus far, they have been capable of staying only long enough for antipasti.  No matter.  Not every tomato dish you meet can be lasagna.  Do not expect comfy leftovers.  They are drinking in the vermouth.  Then sneaking out the door at five am.

They do, however, dress up anything in need of momentary glitz.  They go into a hot pan with some extra virgin until they start to bust their guts.  Then in goes the vermouth and a spoonful of sugar. When the sugar cooks down, they are ready. 

Just take these guys for what they are.  A light tomato primer with a hint of caramelized sweetness and just a bit depth, courtesy of a veil of booze.  Ready to go on a moment’s notice. 

Easy to make, again and again.  Perfect for using up the last lingering orbs on a cherry tomato plant. 

Low hanging fruit?  Sure.  But sometimes that is just what you need to close out summer.

Caramelized Vermouth Cherry Tomatoes

Adapted from Food52

Ingredients:

  • a few glugs of olive oil
  • pint of cherry tomatoes
  • kosher salt
  • 2 to 4 tbsp dry white vermouth 
  • 1 to 2 tbsp of brown sugar 
  • a few sprigs of lemon verbena
  • a few sprigs of thyme

Instructions:

Heat a large sauté pan on medium high heat.  Add a few glugs of olive oil and then the cherry tomatoes.  You want enough olive oil to put a nice gloss on your tomatoes, so add more as needed.

Salt the tomatoes and let them cook down, tossing them in the pan every so often, until the tomatoes start to bust open. This will take about 10 minutes, give or take.

Once the tomatoes start to split, take the pan off the heat and add the vermouth, starting with a few tablespoons.  Put the pan back on the heat to let the vermouth cook down, add a little more vermouth (you could also use water here) if the tomatoes start to stick or dry up.  

Once the majority of the liquid has been cooked off, add in the brown sugar, shaking the pan to distribute it.  Let the sugar dissolve and coat the tomatoes, this should only take a few minutes.  Again, add more liquid if your tomatoes are looking parched.

Add the lemon verbena and thyme leaves.  Taste the tomatoes and add a little more vermouth, sugar, and salt as you see fit. If you decide to add a little more vermouth, you’ll need to let it cook down again but this should only take a few minutes.

From here on out, the tomatoes are ready when you say so.  (I like them to have softened and split, while still holding on to their shape.)  

Top with a few more herb leaves, if desired.

Makes about one cup

Notes:

  1. This is a recipe that functions best in a “splash of this” “dash of that” fashion. Because cherry tomatoes may vary in sweetness or acidity you may find you need slightly more vermouth and a little less sugar or vice versa.  
  2. A number of herbs could work here. Oregano would likely do good things.  Food52 suggests marjoram.  I tried basil one round, but found it made the tomatoes a tad too sweet for my taste.  The dish benefits from an herb with a little more contrast.
September 01, 2012 /Emily Gelsomin
tomato
Eat Vegetables

Oven-Candied Tomatoes, Thoughts of Fall

September 07, 2010 by Emily Gelsomin in Eat Vegetables

I have been mind cheating on summer. We have a few weeks before fall officially begins, but I have already had thoughts of beef bourguignon. I cannot wait to turn my oven on again. I cannot wait to braise.

I feel like a monster. To give up on summer like this.

My guilt led me straight to the pool this past Sunday, a last-ditch effort to rekindle what was left of my summer romance with summer. It was so cold I kept my jacket on the entire time. It was not working.

I should have seen this seasonal adultery coming. The signs were there.

Last week, I lost my cool when I sliced open a melon from the farmers’ market and its juice dumped all over the floor. I have grown emotionally distant, a tad neglectful even, with my corn, letting its sugar quietly turn to starch in my bottom crisper drawer.

I have become resentful of peaches. Tired of standing over my kitchen sink to eat them, while the juice dribbles down my chin.

Then I encountered the oven-candied tomato. It was the best of both worlds: bursting with the final flavors of summer, while still comfortingly fall-ish. The tomatoes barely lasted 12 hours. 

But it was long enough to ease the guilt. And you know what they say about guilt. It is a wasted emotion. Oh wait, that is regret. On second thought, I had better buy a bushel of tomatoes before it is too late.


Oven-Candied Tomatoes

Adapted from The Splendid Table with Lynne Rossetto Kasper

Ingredients:

  • 10 plum tomatoes
  • ⅓ cup olive oil
  • 3 springs rosemary, chopped
  • pinch red pepper flakes
  • kosher salt and pepper

Instructions:

Set the oven to 400 degrees.

Slice tomatoes in half and toss with olive oil on a sheet pan. Sprinkle with rosemary and red pepper flakes. Generously season with salt and pepper.

Roast for 30 minutes and then turn oven to 350 degrees and roast for another 30 minutes. (You may need to occasionally turn the pan to ensure even cooking.)

Turn oven to 300 degrees and roast for an additional 30 minutes or until edges of tomatoes start to blacken slightly. If still not at desired doneness, turn oven to 250 degrees and roast for 10 to 15 minutes more.

Makes 20 halves

Notes:

  1. I am hoping I will stumble across a glut of September tomatoes; they often become discounted towards the tail end of the season, if you can hold out long enough.
  2. Theoretically, you should be able to freeze the tomatoes for a few months, should you have enough self-control to let them last that long.
September 07, 2010 /Emily Gelsomin
tomato
Eat Vegetables

Copyright 2024